John Caskie Collet Papers

Dates: 1918-1957.

Judge, United States District Court, Western and Eastern District of Missouri, 1937-1947; Stabilization Administrator, Office of War Mobilization and Reconversion, 1945-1946; Director, Office of Economic Stabilization, 1946; Consultant in the White House, 1947-1952; Judge, United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, 1947-1955.

The papers of John Caskie Collet consist of certificates, correspondence (letters, telegrams, and memoranda), expense accounts, get well cards, handwritten notes, legal documents, newspaper and magazine clippings, photographs, press releases, programs, reports, scrapbooks, speech drafts, and other materials related to his life and career.

Size: 6 linear feet, 2 linear inches (about 11, 200 pages).Access: Open.Copyright: The donor gave to the U.S. government his copyrights in this material and in any other material received by the U.S. government and maintained in a depository administered by the National Archives and Records Administration. Documents created by U.S. government officials in the course of their duties are in the public domain. Copyright interest in other documents presumably belongs to the creators of those documents, or their heirs. Processed by: Katie Smith, David Clark, and Doug McClellan (2013-2014).

The papers of John Caskie Collet document his public career as a lawyer, judge, and official in the administration of his friend, President Harry S. Truman. They also document his personal life and associations with other prominent persons. Arranged alphabetically in a single Subject File, Collet's papers consist of correspondence (letters, telegrams, and memoranda), certificates, expense accounts, get well cards, handwritten notes, legal documents, newspaper and magazine clippings, photographs, press releases, programs, reports, scrapbooks, speech drafts, and other materials.

Collet's early life through his college years is not well documented in this collection. There are a few documents relating to his service in the U.S. Army Air Corps and as secretary to United States Congressman William W. Rucker. The collection also contains some materials from Collet's law practice with his father, James A. Collet, and from his service as City Attorney for Salisbury, Missouri and County Prosecutor for Chariton County, Missouri. Documents relating to his tenure as Assistant Counsel for the Missouri State Highway Department are filed under "State Highway Department." Filed under "Public Service Commission" are letters of recommendation and congratulatory messages from Collet's service as Chairman of the Missouri Public Service Commission. His brief service on the Missouri Supreme Court is the subject of some correspondence as well as newspaper clippings in his scrapbooks.

Collet's friendship with Harry S. Truman, which began when Truman was serving as Presiding Judge of the Jackson County (Missouri) Court, is reflected in correspondence and autographed items filed under "Truman, Harry S." and elsewhere in the collection. During the 1930s, Collet was also associated with the Kansas City political boss Tom Pendergast. Among the items filed in the collection under "Correspondence-Pendergast" is a rare note from Pendergast written in red pencil (a color indicating that the boss's request was imperative).

There are extensive materials in the collection relating to Collet's service as U.S. District Court Judge for the Western and Eastern District of Missouri, from 1937 to 1947. Filed under "District Judge" is information concerning President Franklin D. Roosevelt's appointment of Collet to the federal bench, as well as records of a few cases tried by Judge Collet. Also well documented in the collection is Collet's work with the Office of War Mobilization and Reconversion and the Office of Economic Stabilization, which occurred while he was on temporary leave from the federal bench from 1945 to 1946. Related correspondence with John Steelman, John Snyder, and Chester Bowles; executive orders; handwritten notes; reports; speeches; and newspaper clippings are filed under "Stabilization Administrator" and elsewhere in the collection.

While serving the White House as an unofficial consultant, Judge Collet was elevated by President Truman to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit in 1947. Materials relating to Collet's service on the Court of Appeals include congratulatory correspondence from friends and colleagues, memoranda, newspaper clippings, and the records of a few cases in which Collet was involved on the court. These materials are mostly filed under "Court of Appeals" or "Minot Docket, 1955."

This collection also has a significant amount of material regarding Judge Collet's family, including correspondence with his father, James A. Collet, and scrapbooks highlighting the early lives and college careers of his sons, William A. Collet and John C. Collet, Jr. Collet's family, friends, and personal life are reflected in correspondence, get well cards, newspaper clippings, and photographs throughout the collection.

Along with signed materials from President Truman and Tom Pendergast, the papers also include a candid, signed letter from then Senator Lyndon Johnson pertaining to Judge Collet's illness in late 1955. The collection also contains signed letters from University of Missouri head football coach Don Faurot, Anheuser Busch President Augustus Busch, St. Louis Browns President Bill Veeck, General Omar Bradley, Attorney General and Supreme Court Justice Tom Clark, Governor Guy Park, Governor Lloyd Stark, and Governor Forrest Donnell. Other individuals represented in this collection include but are not limited to President Franklin D. Roosevelt, Matthew Connelly, Charles Ross, Jim Pendergast, Charles Aylward, James Aylward, William Bray, and the President of the St. Louis Cardinals, Sam Breadon.